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The Tea app for women, used to share information about men, has surged in Dearborn — prompting divorces and a short-lived ...
Circa Sports runs sports betting in Iowa, Illinois, Kentucky, Colorado and Nevada, through its app and locations in casinos.
Strong storms are expected to bring damaging winds to parts of Oklahoma on Tuesday afternoon, with peak activity expected ...
Triple-digit heat will return to Northern California later this week, though we'll catch a break on Monday and Tuesday.
Earlier this month, a new resource for women to share cautionary dating tales launched. Now, there's some slightly suspicious ...
TeaOnHer, a new phone app that allows men to post anonymously about women, has gone viral and is trending on social media, ...
The Tea Dating App breach exposed thousands of users’ sensitive information and led to a slew of class action lawsuits ...
Houston relationship experts consider the benefits and negatives of dating surveillance and safety tools, such as the popular ...
The new app, called TeaOnHer, is essentially a gender flip of the original Tea app. It's already facing security concerns.
A data breach of the Tea app recently exposed users' selfies, IDs, and private messages. Cybersecurity experts say it demonstrates broader issues.
The biggest red flag is that the Tea app seems to be an attempt to quick-fix on an individual level what is a structural problem — that is, misogyny — via surveillance culture.
The recent data hack targeting an app for sharing information about nefarious men is a reminder that the impulse to protect frequently comes at a cost.